BTRFS The Next Linux File Systems

BTRFS (B-tree file system) is a GPL copy-on-write file system for Linux developed by Oracle and is expected to replace ext4 as the default file system in future Linux distributions.

Here are the main features of BRTFS (pronounced like Better FS):

Extend file system (264 max file size: 16 Exabytes)

Copy on write (COW) data and meta-data

Space efficient packaging of small file

Optional transparency compression (zlib/LZO)

Integrity checksumming (CRC-32C) for data and meta-data

Writable snapshots

Subvolumes

Online resize, defragmentation, device management

Multiple device support (pool of storage)

Offline conversion from ext3 and ext4

Specialized log for fast sync and O_SYNC writes

BTRFS is included in the Linux kernel (since Linux 2.6.29) and can be enabled during installation of several distributions such as Fedora 15 and Ubuntu 10.10, but is not officially the default file system just yet.

To learn more about the internal of BTRFS you can watch the 30 minutes BTRFS training by Oracle / The Linux Foundation. You can also visit the official BTRFS page on Oracle OSS website.

At the administration level, AFAIK there are 2 commands to be used:

mkfs.btrfs – To format a drive to BTRFS or create a BTRFS image. (equivalent to mkfs.ext4)

btrfs – Utility to control BTRFS volumes and perform operations such as disk checking, getting volume information, resizing the volume, creating snapshots and more. You can read BTRFS manpage for details.